Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T09:18:20.024Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Continuities: Essentialist or Sensory?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Extract

Hamilakis and Yalouri make an important contribution to the recent growth in studies of Greek nationalism, which is part of a more general trend in history, anthropology and related disciplines to analyse nationalism as a cultural phenomenon, and the politics of ‘invented traditions’. By focusing on the sacralisation of archaeological remains, they add an important piece to the general picture of the uses of the past in modern Greece. While doing this they make their argument relevant to those authors looking at the power of objects and material remains to serve as sites for memory and historical consciousness, objects and/or rituals whose function is to ‘recall the past without enumerating it’ (Rappaport 1994: 76). In particular, archaeological remains resemble those ‘inalienable possessions’ which because of their power to symbolise continuity with ancestors, are withdrawn from the circuits of gift and commodity exchange (Weiner 1992). Objects from the past, much as we may attempt to preserve them behind glass cases in museums, have a ‘social life’ and are deployed in struggles for power and ideological legitimacy in the present. Given the sacred or ‘religious’ character that archaeological remains play in the Greek national narrative, Hamilakis and Yalouri sensibly argue that archaeologists, like historians and other scholars, must see their work as necessarily political. We cannot escape into objectivity; studies of the past are always in some way also reflections of the values of the present and the future. The authors rightly point to the hegemonic status of the ancient past in contemporary Greece. As I discovered during my research into historical consciousness on the island of Kalymnos, Kalymnians of radically different religious and political persuasions were united in the view that History should be read for what it revealed about the continuity in character of peoples and nations. Like archaeology, the narrative of Greek nationalism dominated written history on Kalymnos. Popular memories which conflicted with this narrative — for example, of women-led collective action — could still be found, but had none of the social capital to compete with ‘official history’, as written by an educated elite (see Doumanis 1997; Sutton 1998; 1999).

Type
Discussion
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alexopoulos, G., 1995: O teleutaios romantikos kai oi chriseis tou parelthontos, I lexi 126, 142155.Google Scholar
Anderson, B., 1991: Imagined communities. Reflections on the origins and spread of nationalism, London.Google Scholar
Anderson, B., 1994: Exodus, Critical inquiry 20, 314327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andreadis, G., 1989: Ta paidia tis Antigonis. Mnimi kai ideologia sti Neoteri Ellada, Athens.Google Scholar
Andronikos, M., 1983: Ta glypta tou Parthenona, To Vima 3-7-83.Google Scholar
Andronikos, M., 1985: Stin xenitia, To Vima 3-3-85.Google Scholar
Andronikos, M., 1987: Epeteios, To Vima 8-11-87.Google Scholar
Andronikos, M., 1988: Apories kai erotimatika, To Vima 3-7-88.Google Scholar
Andronikos, M., 1997: To hroniko tis Verginas, Athens.Google Scholar
Appadurai, A., 1995: The production of locality, in Fardon, R. (ed.), Counterworks. Managing the diversity of knowledge, London and New York, 204225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnakis, G., 1963: The role of religion in the development of Balkan nationalism, in Jelavich, B. and Jelavich, C. (eds), The Balkans in transition, Berkeley, 115144.Google Scholar
Astuti, R., 1995: ‘The Vezo are not a kind of people’: identity, difference and ‘ethnicity’ among a fishing people of western Madagascar, American ethnologist 22, 464482.Google Scholar
Atkinson, J.A., Banks, I. and O'Sullivan, J. (eds), 1996: Nationalism and archaeology, Glasgow.Google Scholar
Augustinos, G., 1989: Culture and authenticity in a small state: historiography and national development in Greece, East European quarterly 23(1), 1731.Google Scholar
Balakrishnan, G., 1995: The national imagination, in New left review 211, 5669.Google Scholar
Balibar, E., 1990: The nation form: history and ideology, Review: Fernand Braudel centre 13, 329–61.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P., 1977: Outline of a theory of practice, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourdieu, P., 1990: The logic of practice, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breuilly, J., 1993: Nationalism and the state, Manchester.Google Scholar
Brow, J., 1990: Notes on community, hegemony and the uses of the past, Anthropological quarterly 63, 16.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., 1994: The destruction of a common heritage: the archaeology of war in Croatia, Bosnia, and Hercegovina, Antiquity 68, 120126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clogg, R., 1985: Sense of the past in pre-independence Greece, in Sussex, R. and Eade, J.C. (eds), 730.Google Scholar
Clogg, R., 1992: A concise history of Greece, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Comaroff, J., 1995: Ethnicity, nationalism and the politics of difference in an age of revolution, in Comaroff, J.L. and Stern, P.C. (eds), Perspectives on nationalism and war, Luxembourg, 243276.Google Scholar
Connerton, P., 1989: How societies remember, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Danforth, L., 1995: The Macedonian conflict. Ethnic nationalism in a transnational world, Princeton.Google Scholar
Diamandouros, N., 1972: Political modernization, social conflict and cultural cleavage in the formation of the modern Greek state: 1821–1828, Columbia (Unpublished Ph.D).Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, M., 1996: Islamic archaeology and the origin of the Spanish nation, in Díaz-Andreu, M. and Champion, T. (eds), 6889.Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, M., 1997: Nationalism, ethnicity and archaeology. The archaeological study of Iberians through the looking glass, Journal of Mediterranean studies 7, 155168.Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, M. and Champion, T., 1996: Nationalism and archaeology in Europe: an introduction, in Díaz-Andreu, M. and Champion, T. (eds), 123.Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, M., and Champion, T. (eds), 1996: Nationalism and archaeology in Europe, London.Google Scholar
Dimaras, K., 1989: Neoellinikos diafotismos, Athens.Google Scholar
Douglas, M., 1966: Purity and danger. An analysis of the concepts of pollution and taboo, London.Google Scholar
Doumanis, N., 1997: Myth and memory in the Mediterranean. Remembering fascism's empire, London.Google Scholar
Dubisch, J., 1995: In a different place. Pilgrimage, gender, and politics at a Greek island shrine, Princeton.Google Scholar
Edwards, C., 1999: Introduction: shadows and fragments, in Edwards, C. (ed.), Roman presences. Perceptions of Rome in European culture, 1789–1945, Cambridge, 118.Google Scholar
Field, L.W., 1999: Complications and collaborations: anthropologists and the ‘unackowledged tribes’ of California, Current anthropology 40(2), 193209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foucault, M., 1980: Power/knowledge, New York.Google Scholar
Fox, R.G., 1990: Introduction, in Fox, R.G. (ed.), National ideologies and the production of national cultures, Washington D.C., 114.Google Scholar
Friedman, J., 1992: The past in the future: history and the politics of identity, American anthropologist 94, 837859.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, J., 1994: History and the politics of identity, in Cultural identity and global process, London, 117146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geertz, C., 1993: The interpretation of cultures, London (1973).Google Scholar
Gellner, E., 1983: Nations and nationalism, Oxford.Google Scholar
Giddens, A., 1984: The constitution of society, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gourgouris, S., 1993: Notes on the nation's dream-work, Qui parle 7, 81101.Google Scholar
Gourgouris, S., 1996: Dream nation. Enlightenment, colonization and the institution of modern Greece, Stanford.Google Scholar
Gran-Aymerich, E., 1998: Naissance de l'archéologie moderne, 1798–1945, Paris.Google Scholar
Haley, B.D. and Wilcoxon, L., 1997: Anthropology and the making of Chumash tradition, Current Anthropology 38, 761–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 1996: Through the looking glass: nationalism, archaeology and the politics of identity, Antiquity 70, 975–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., 1998: Archaeology and the politics of identity in Cyprus, Journal of Mediterranean archaeology 11, 107111.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y, 1999a: La trahison des archéologues? Archaeological practice as intellectual activity in postmodernity, Journal of Mediterranean archaeology 12, 6079.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilakis, Y, 1999b: Stories from exile: fragments from the cultural biography of the Parthenon (or ‘Elgin’) marbles, World archaeology 31, 303320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., and Yalouri, E. 1996: Antiquities as symbolic capital in modern Greek society, Antiquity 70, 117129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Handler, R., 1994: Is ‘identity’ a useful cross-cultural concept?, in Gillis, J.R. (ed.), Commemorations. The politics of national identity, Princeton, 2740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, O., 1996: The temporalities of tradition: reflections on a changing anthropology, in Hubinger, V. (ed.), Grasping the changing world. Anthropological concepts in the postmodern era, London, 116.Google Scholar
Hart, L.K., 1992: Time, religion and social experience in rural Greece, Lanham.Google Scholar
Hassan, F., 1998: Memorabilia: archaeological materiality and national identity in Egypt, in Meskell, L. (ed.), 200216.Google Scholar
Heller, Y., 1992: Macedonia puts its faith in ancestor worship, Guardian weekly 12-4-92, 14.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M., 1982: Ours once more. Folklore, ideology, and the making of modern Greece, Austin.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M., 1987: Anthropology through the looking-glass. Critical ethnography in the margins of Europe, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M., 1991: A place in history. Social and monumental time in a Cretan town, Princeton.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, M., 1992: The social production of indifference. Exploring the symbolic roots of western bureaucracy, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, E.J., 1992: Nations and nationalism since 1780. Programme, myth and reality, Cambridge (second edition).Google Scholar
Horne, D., 1984: The great museum. The re-presentation of history, London.Google Scholar
Hourmouziadis, G., 1984: Sholia stin elliniki mouseiologia, Epistimoniki skepsi 18, 1520.Google Scholar
Hroch, M., 1996: Epilogue, in Díaz-Andreu, M. and Champion, T. (eds), 294300.Google Scholar
James, W., and Johnson, D.H. (eds), 1988: Vernacular christianity. Essays in the social anthropology of religion, Oxford.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, M., 1985: Adamantios Korais: language and revolution, in Sussex, R. and Eade, J.C. (eds), 4255.Google Scholar
Jones, S., 1997: The archaeology of ethnicity. Constructing identities in the past and present, London.Google Scholar
Just, R., 1988: Anti-clericism and national identity: attitudes towards the Orthodox Church in Greece, in James, W. and Johnson, D.H. (eds), 1530.Google Scholar
Just, R., 1989: Triumph of the ethnos, in Tonkin, E., MacDonald, M. and Chapman, M. (eds), History and ethnicity, London, 7188.Google Scholar
Kakridis, I.Th., 1979: I archaioi Ellines sti neoelliniki laiki paradosi, Athens.Google Scholar
Kapferer, B., 1988: Legends of people, myths of state, Washington D.C.Google Scholar
Kapferer, B., 1989: Nationalist ideology and a comparative anthropology, Ethnos 54, 161–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kedourie, E., 1966: Nationalism, London.Google Scholar
Kenna, M.E., 1985: Icons in theory and practice: an Orthodox Christian example, in History of Religions 24, 345368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kertzer, D.I., 1988: Ritual, politics and power, New Haven.Google Scholar
Kitromilides, P., 1989: ‘Imagined communities’ and the origin of the national question in the Balkans, European history quarterly 19, 149–94.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. and Antoniadou, S., 1998, Archaeology, politics, and the cultural heritage of Cyprus, in Meskell, L. (ed.), 1343.Google Scholar
Kohl, P.L., 1998: Nationalism and archaeology: on the constructions of nations and the reconstructions of the remore past, Annual review of anthropology 27, 223–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kohl, P.L., and Fawcett, C. (eds), 1995: Nationalism, politics and the practice of archaeology, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kokkou, A., 1977: I merimna gia tis archaiotites stin Ellada kai ta prota mouseia, Athens.Google Scholar
Kotsakis, K., 1991: The powerful past: theoretical trends in Greek archaeology, in Hodder, I. (ed.), Archaeological theory in Europe. The last thirty years, London, 6590.Google Scholar
Kotsakis, K. 1998: The past is ours-images of Greek Macedonia, in Meskell, L. (ed.), 4467.Google Scholar
Kremmydas, V., 1992: Ypodohi ton evropaikon ideon apo ton Ellinismo sto telos tis Tourkokratias, O politis 120, 4042.Google Scholar
Lampeter Archaeology Workshop, 1997: Relativism, objectivity and the politics of the past, Archaeological dialogues 4, 164198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavvas, G., Stephanidou-Tiveriou, Th., Mentzos, A., Zaharopoulos, N., Konidaris, I., Akanthopoulos, P., Mauropoulou-Tsioumi, Ch., and Manitakis, A., 1997: I Rotonda ston “kyklome tin kimolia”, Thessaloniki.Google Scholar
Leontis, A., 1991: Cultural politics and popular uses of the ancients, Journal of modern Greek studies 9, 191214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Llobera, J.R., 1994a: The god of modernity. The development of nationalism in western Europe, Oxford.Google Scholar
Llobera, J.R., 1994b: Durkheim and the national question, in Pickering, W.S.F. and Martins, H. (eds), Debating Durkheim, London, 134158.Google Scholar
Loukas, I., 1996: I noimatodotisi tou 1821 kai i naftiki ischis tou Ellinismou, Athens.Google Scholar
Loukatos, D., 1978: Tourist archeofolklore in Greece, in Dorson, R.M. (ed.), Folkore in the modern world, The Hague, 175182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowenthal, D., 1988: Classical antiquities as global and national heritage, Antiquity 62, 726–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacGregor, A., 1998: Museums and ‘national antiquities’ in the mid-19th century, in Brand, V. (ed.), The study of the past in the Victorian Age, Oxford, 125138.Google Scholar
MacNeal, R.A., 1991: Archaeology and the destruction of the later Athenian Acropolis, Antiquity 65, 4963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mango, C., 1965: Byzantinism and romantic Hellenism, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 18, 2943.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merriman, N., 1996: Understanding heritage, Journal of material culture 1, 277286.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meskell, L. (ed.), 1998: Archaeology under fire. Nationalism, politics, and heritage in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East, LondonGoogle Scholar
Metaxas, M., 1994: Carnations for the imprisoned marbles, Eleftherotypia 11-2-1994.Google Scholar
Morris, I., 1994: Archaeologies of Greece, in Morris, I. (ed.), Classical Greece. Ancient histories and modern archaeologies, Cambridge, 347.Google Scholar
Moskof, K., 1979: Eisagogika stin istoria tou kinimatos tis ergatikis taxis. I diamorphosi tis ethnikis kai koinonikis syneidisis stin Ellada, Thessaloniki.Google Scholar
Mosse, G.L., 1976: Mass politics and the political liturgy of nationalism, in Kamenka, E. (ed.), Nationalism. The nature and the evolution of an ideal, London, 3954.Google Scholar
Nellys', 1989: Autoprosopografia, Athens.Google Scholar
Odermatt, P., 1996: Built heritage and the politics of (re)presentation, Archaeological Dialogues 3,95136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petrakos, V., 1982: Dokimio gia tin archaiologiki nomothesia, Athens.Google Scholar
Petrakos, V., 1987a: I en Athinais Archaiologiki Etaireia: i istoria ton 150 chronon tis, Athens.Google Scholar
Petrakos, V., 1987b: Ideographia tis en Athinais Archaeologikis Etaireias, Archaeologiki ephimeris, 25197.Google Scholar
Petrakos, V., 1988: Ta prota chronia tis ellinikis archaiologias, Archaiologia 26, 9099.Google Scholar
Petrakos, V, 1994: Ta archaia tis Ellados kata ton polemo, Athens.Google Scholar
Philippidis, D., 1994: ‘O apothavmasmos tou Parthenona apo tin elliniki koinonia’, in Tournikiotis, P. (ed.), O Parthenonas kai i aktinovolia tou sta neotera hronia, Athens, 287309.Google Scholar
Pina-Cabral, J.D., 1989: The valuation of time among the peasant population of the Alto Minho, nortwest Portugal, in Layton, R.H. (ed.), Who needs the past? Indigenous values and archaeology, London, 5969.Google Scholar
Politis, A., 1993: Romantika chronia. Ideologies kai nootropies stin Ellada tou 1830–1880, Athens.Google Scholar
Pomian, K., 1990: Collectors and curiosities. Paris and Venice 1500–1800, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Protopsaltis, E., 1967: Istorika engrafa peri archaeotiton kai loipon mnimeion kata tous chronous tis epanastaseos kat tou Kapodistia, Athens.Google Scholar
Rappaport, J., 1994: Cumbe reborn, Chicago.Google Scholar
Ricoeur, P., 1976: Interpretation theory. Discourse and the surplus of meaning, Texas.Google Scholar
Rodocanachi, C.P., 1949: A great work of civic re-adaptation in Greece, Athens.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, C.M., 1990: Introduction, in Rosenberg, C.M. (ed.), Art and politics in late Medieval and early Renaissance Italy, 1250–1500, Indiana, 110.Google Scholar
Seremetakis, C. N., 1991: The last word. Women, death and divination in Inner Mani, Chicago.Google Scholar
Seremetakis, C. N., 1994: The senses still. Perception and memory as material culture in modernity, Chicago.Google Scholar
Shanks, H., 1998: Israel's archaeological crisis, Biblical archaeological review 24/5:6, 68.Google Scholar
Silberman, N.A., 1989: Between past and present. Archaeology, ideology and nationalism in the modern Middle East, New York.Google Scholar
Silberman, N.A., 1995: Promised land and chosen people: the politics and poetics of archaeological narrative, in Kohl, L. P. and Fawcett, C. (eds), Nationalism, politics and the practice of archaeology, Cambridge, 249262.Google Scholar
Skopetea, E., 1988: To protypo vasileio kai i Megali Idea: opseis tou ethnikou provlimatos stin Ellada (1830–1880), Athens.Google Scholar
Skopetea, E., 1997: Fallmerayer: technasmata tou antipalou deous, Athens.Google Scholar
Smart, N., 1983: Religion, myth and nationalism, in Merkl, P.H. and Smart, N. (eds), Religion and politics in the modern world, New York, 1528.Google Scholar
Smith, A.D., 1991: National identity, London.Google Scholar
Stewart, C., 1989: Hegemony or rationality? The position of supernatural in modern Greece, Journal of modern Greek studies 7, 77104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, C., 1994: Syncretism as a dimension of nationalist discourse in modern Greece, in Stewart, C. and Shaw, R. (eds), Syncretism/anti-syncretism. The politics of religious synthesis, London, 127144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stewart, C., 1998: Who owns Rotonda? Church versus State in Greece, Anthropology today 14, 39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoianovich, T., 1960: The conquering Balkan orthodox merchant, Journal of economic history 20,234313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sussex, R. and Eade, J.C. (eds), 1985: Culture and nationalism in nineteenth-century Eastern Europe, Ohio.Google Scholar
Sutton, D., 1998: Memories cast in stone. The relevance of the past in everyday life. Oxford.Google Scholar
Sutton, D., 1999: Rescripting women's collective action: nationalist writing and the politics of gendered memory, Identities 5, 469500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsigakou, F.M., 1981: The rediscovery of Greece. Travellers and painters of the romantic era, London.Google Scholar
Tsoukalas, K., 1977: Exartisi kai anaparagogi. O koinonikos roros ton ekpaideftikon michanismon stin Ellada (1830-1922), Athens.Google Scholar
van der Veer, P. and Lehmann, H. (eds), 1999: Nation and religion. Perspectives on Europe and Asia, Princeton.Google Scholar
Veloudis, G., 1982: O Jacob Fallmerayer kai i genesi tou ellinikou istorismou, Athens.Google Scholar
Walsh, K., 1992: The representation of the past. Museums and heritage in the post-modern world, London.Google Scholar
Weiner, A., 1992: Inalienable possessions. The paradox of keeping-while-giving, Berkeley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xanthakis, A.K., 1988: Istoria tis Ellinikis photograflas 1839–1860, Athens.Google Scholar
Yalouri, E., 1993: Classical or Byzantine heritage. Conflicting pasts in modern Greek society, Cambridge (Unpublished M.Phil. dissertation).Google Scholar
Yalouri, E., in prep.: Global fame, local claim. The Athenian Acropolis as an objectification of Greek identity, PhD thesis, University College London.Google Scholar